That argument seems more political than practical.
If on one hand you have a tool that you can actually use to help with your job, and another that sounds like a very advanced chatbot but doesn't actually provide value, well the second tool being open-source doesn't change that it's doesn't provide value.
(Also, assuming that open-source tools aren't going to upend a ton of people's jobs seems really naive. These people aren't going to be any less bitter that their jobs are taken by freelance nerds instead of corporate nerds.)
If on one hand you have a tool that you can actually use to help with your job, and another that sounds like a very advanced chatbot but doesn't actually provide value, well the second tool being open-source doesn't change that it's doesn't provide value.
(Also, assuming that open-source tools aren't going to upend a ton of people's jobs seems really naive. These people aren't going to be any less bitter that their jobs are taken by freelance nerds instead of corporate nerds.)